A couple of folks have asked, so I’m finally putting together my wrap-up post for 2016: what I wrote, what was published, and what I read.

WRITING

Not much to report on this front. 2016 was not my most consistent year for creating new content. I didn’t blog much, and I didn’t really track how much writing I was doing, other than knowing that there were a majority of months where I didn’t write or edit at all. I finished a couple of stories, including “Chasing May” which sold to the anthology Kepler’s Cowboys from Hadrosaur Productions. I sent out a few attempts at getting reprints sold, as well, but not much came of that. (Admittedly, I didn’t make the strongest effort I could possibly have made.)

PUBLISHING

2016 saw the release of three anthologies with my work included:

“Threshold” appeared in One Thousand Words For War from CBAY Books

“Stress Cracks” appeared in Galactic Games from Baen (My first professional-rate story sale!)

“Yeti” appeared in Robbed of Sleep, Volume 4 from Troy Blackford.

I also sold one story, the aforementioned “Chasing May,” which releases in just a few weeks from this writing.

READING

I set myself a variety of reading challenges in 2016. I managed to complete a few of them.

On Goodreads, I challenged myself to read 100 books. I read 105.

Here’s the breakdown of what I read:

Fiction: 97 books

4 anthologies

1 noir

2 horror

1 fantasy

1 single-author collection (1 urban fantasy)

17 graphic novels

11 super-hero

4 YA adventure

1 YA comedy

1 comic strip collection

12 magazines (all issues of Lightspeed magazine)

43 novels

1 crime

1 mystery

1 noir

1 Fantasy

1 historical fiction

1historical fantasy

2historical romance

3historical urban fantasy

3alternate history

3 horror

1 literary

4 pulp adventure

2 science fiction

13 urban fantasy

1 YA urban fantasy

1 YA science fiction

8 novellas

2 horror

3 fantasy

1 science fiction

1 urban fantasy

1 mystery

1 picture book

1 playscript

10 short stories published as stand-alone ebooks

4 urban fantasy

3 mystery

1 modern romance

1 thriller

1 historical fantasy

Non-Fiction: 8 books

5 Memoir/biography

2 History

1 Writing Advice

Other Book Stats:

# of Authors/Editors: 86 (including graphic novel artists); 34 of these were female authors. (I didn’t do a good job of tracking other sub-group metrics, such as writers of color, queer writers, etc. I’m going to make a better effort this year.)

Shortest Book Read: 20 pages (Forbid the Sea by Seanan McGuire)

Longest Book Read: 496 (Feedback by Mira Grant)

(Interesting that the shortest and longest read were by the same author, albeit one under a pen-name.)

Total # of pages read: 24064

Average # of pages per book: 229

Format Summary:

4 audiobooks

28 ebooks (5 Nook, 23 Kindle)

73 print

17 hardcovers

56 softcovers

On my Livejournal, I challenged myself to read 365 short stories (1 per day, basically), but I only managed 198 this year. I did not read as many anthologies or single-author collections cover-to-cover as I have in previous years.

Those 198 stories appeared in:

5 Magazines

Asimov’s

Cemetary Dance

Daily Science Fiction

Disturbed Digest

Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

Lightspeed Magazine

One Story

One Teen Story

The Dark

The Strand

Three Slices

Unbound

10 Anthologies

Candle in the Attic

Clockwork Phoenix 5

Christmas at the Mysterious Bookshop

Dark and Dangerous Things III

Ghost in the Cogs

In Sunlight or in Shadow (Stories based on the paintings of Edward Hopper)

Robbed of Sleep Vol 4

Shattered Shields

1 Single-Author Collection

Two Tales of the Iron Druid by Kevin Hearne

8 Stand-alone (self-pubbed or publisher-pubbed in e-format)

Seanan McGuire (mostly from her website)

Jordan L. Hawk (email newsletter)

Lawrence Block (purchased in e-format via Amazon)

Those 198 stories were written by 166 different authors. 82 of those were women (again, didn’t do a good job of tracking any other author-identifying metrics). The work was published by 26 different editors, roughly (there were a few for whom I’m not sure who the editor was / who to credit).

So there you have it: my writing, publishing and reading, by the numbers, for 2016. (I was going to include other media consumed, like music, movies, and television, but I didn’t do as good of a job compiling those numbers in 2016. Oh well!)

Anthony’s favorite punctuation mark is the semi-colon because thanks to cancer surgery in 2005, a semi-colon is all he has left. Enjoy Anthony's blog "Semi-Colon," where you will find Anthony's commentary on various literary subjects.